LOUPS

Wolves Might Use Their Eyes to Talk to Each Other. It’s no secret that wolves, foxes, and dogs are highly social animals.

But beyond all the wagging, pawing and yipping we like to try to interpret, canids may have yet another way to communicate. New research hints at the possibility that dogs and their ilk could be sending each other signals with their eyes. A team of Japanese researchers looked at pictures of nearly every canid species and found that those with highly social pack and hunting behaviors were more likely to have easily-visible eyes. They then watched some of those species interact in zoos and concluded that those with eyes that were easier to see were more likely to be social.

True story of Paul (Pavle) Balenovic, and his friend and companion wolf named LIK. In 1980 Paul decided to adopt a wolf cub from LIKA region (Croatia) and named the wolf Lik, a namesake of the Lika area. Lik lived permanently, for the first two years of his life, in Paul's house, on the outskirts of the town Zagreb. From the very beginning he was given a german shepherd dog as the companion to live with in the following 11 years. Knowing only too well that Lik needed the open, wild natural spaces, Paul began regular visits to the wild highland areas of Velebit along with his wolf friend, staying there for days and nights.

Therefore it assumed a brutal rivalry that is proper for a wolf pack. He knew full well that Lik belonged to the wilderness and with his own kind. The young Lacha, as she was named, very soon became inseparable from Lik and a little while later they had offspring.
La LPO punie pour avoir fait suspendre un arrêté illégal de tir de loup dans les Hautes-Alpes. Le Conseil général des Hautes-Alpes ne veut plus travailler avec la LPO suite à la suspension d’un arrêté de tir de loup.